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Lifespan Respite Systems : Building Bridges to Family Support. Jill Kagan, Director ARCH National Respite Network and Resource Center jbkagan@verizon.net www.archrespite.org. Background. Taking Lifespan Respite to National Scale. Current Status of Lifespan Respite Programs.
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Lifespan Respite Systems: Building Bridges to Family Support Jill Kagan, Director ARCH National Respite Network and Resource Center jbkagan@verizon.net www.archrespite.org Background Taking Lifespan Respite to National Scale Current Status of Lifespan Respite Programs What are Lifespan Respite Care Programs? Defined by the Lifespan Respite Care Act of 2006 (PL109-442)as: Coordinated systems of accessible, community-based respite care services for family caregivers of children or adults with special needs Lifespan Respite Law Enacted 2006 Current Lifespan Respite Grantee States • Eligible State Lead Agency: • State agency that administers Older Americans Act; • State agency that administers Medicaid; or • Any state agency designated by the Governor • State Lead Agency Required to collaborate with: • Aging and Disability Resource Center and • State Respite Coalition or Statewide Respite Organization • Funded each year from 2009-2013 at $2.5 million • Respite: The Challenges • Multiple Programs • Multiple Entry Points • Limited Providers • Lack of Caregiver Awareness • Multiple Funding Sources Federal Program Implementation Lifespan Respite Grantee Activities • Administration for Community Living/Administration on Aging • awards grants to state agencies on a competitive basis • 32 States and DC funded between 2009 & 2013 with initial • grants up to $200,000 for three year projects, followed by • Integration and Sustainability grants for select states. • Environmental Scans/Needs Assessments • Defining Stakeholder Roles (ADRCs, Coalitions, Others) • Connecting ADRCs and Respite Coalitions • Public Awareness Campaigns • Website/Database Development & Expansion • Partnerships with the Faith Community • Volunteer Training and Recruitment • Respite Provision – Gap Filling • Provider Training and Recruitment • Emergency Respite • Characteristics of Lifespan Respite Best Practices • Identification and coordination of existing • respite resources at the state level • Identification of service gaps and creation • and monitoring of new respite services • Recruitment/training of respite providers • Connecting families to respite services, • providers, and payment resources • Promotion of public awareness about respite Mandatory Uses of Funds • Development or enhancement of State and local Lifespan • Respite Systems • Provision of respite services (planned or emergency) • Recruitment and training of respite providers and volunteers • Information for caregivers about available respite • Assistance in gaining access to respite services 2013 Program Expansion • 8 Current State Grantees & Idaho Funded • Builds on Existing Projects • Performance Measurement and Sustainability Focused • Key Expansion Activities: • Vouchers/Affordable Respite Options • Quality Measures • Enhance Consumer Choice and Control • Standardize Referral Protocols • Formalize and Target Marketing Strategies • Grow and Strengthen Coalitions Original Lifespan Respite States • Oregon (1997) • Nebraska (1999) • Wisconsin (2000) • Oklahoma (2000) Association of University Centers on Disabilities Conference (AUCD )2013